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Tag: Movie premieres

  • Chanel couture gets a breath of fresh air — and a star-studded audience

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    PARIS — PARIS (AP) — Fashion powerhouse Chanel stacked the Paris front row like a movie premiere Tuesday: Nicole Kidman, Dua Lipa, Penélope Cruz, A$AP Rocky, Gracie Abrams, Margaret Qualley.

    Then, it handed the spotlight to its new designer, Matthieu Blazy, for his much-anticipated couture debut built on one big, confident swing: joy.

    Inside the Grand Palais, the house went full fantasy.

    The set was a dream-garden of candy-colored trees and giant pink-and-red mushrooms: a surreal antidote to the gray January day outside, and to the even heavier mood of the world beyond the doors.

    Before the first look, Blazy even teased the mood with an animation film of woodland animals at work in the Chanel ateliers, “Cinderella” style: a wink that said this would be couture, but not grim.

    Then came the clothes, and the message landed fast: lightness.

    Blazy took Chanel’s most famous codes — the suit, the pearls, the chain-weighted hems — and made them feel almost weightless.

    A classic skirt suit arrived as a sheer, barely-there version of itself, cut so delicately it looked like air had been tailored.

    In a house where tweed can be armor, this was tweed as whisper.

    Birds hovered over the collection as a guiding idea: freedom, motion, travel.

    Featherlike textures and flighty embroideries fluttered across silhouettes that moved like breath instead of structure.

    There were flashes of plumage in color and surface — at times bright, at times raven-dark — and plenty of soft, floating chiffon that made the models look as if they were gliding rather than walking.

    The best trick was how the craft wasn’t obvious.

    Up close, the work was meticulous: a level of handwork couture clients pay for, and ateliers live for.

    But the overall effect stayed easy, almost casual; as if the clothes were beautiful without demanding applause.

    Blazy played with the artistic technique trompe l’oeil, including a tank top-and-jeans idea reimagined in organza, and with textures that were romantic but also a little strange; couture that winked.

    In a brand built on total looks and strong house signatures, Blazy offered something personal: choice.

    Models were invited to pick symbols and messages to stitch into the clothes — a love note, a sign, a private mark.

    It pushed Chanel away from “uniform” and toward intimacy: couture as a wearable secret, not just a public statement.

    The show also had a sense of casting as storytelling.

    Blazy’s runways have tended to carry an open, joyful energy, and that continued here — a mix of ages, backgrounds and presences that made the clothes feel lived-in.

    Model Bhavitha Mandava, fresh off her viral moment at the house’s Métiers d’Art show, returned.

    Later she closed as a couture bride, shimmering and feathered, smiling as if she knew she was ending the scene exactly on the right note.

    The soundtrack shifted moods like a DJ set, moving from Disney sweetness to millennial nostalgia — including Moby’s “Porcelain,” and a mashup that blended Oasis’ “Wonderwall” with The Verve’s “Bitter Sweet Symphony.”

    By the finale, the room was playing along.

    Big sets are easy. Blazy’s debut didn’t try to overpower Chanel with noise or force a new era with aggression. Instead, he made it feel alive.

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  • Channing Tatum, Olivia Wilde and Charli xcx arrive at Sundance Film Festival for premieres

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    PARK CITY, Utah — The Sundance Film Festival is in full swing, with Channing Tatum, Olivia Wilde and Charli xcx movies premiering back-to-back at the storied Eccles Theatre Friday evening in Park City, Utah. Considered some of the hottest tickets at the festival, the waitlists are already long, and the lines will surely be longer.

    First up is “Josephine,” writer-director Beth De Araújo’s raw drama about an 8-year-old girl (Mason Reeves) whose life and sense of safety is upended after she witnesses a crime in Golden Gate Park. Tatum and Gemma Chan play the parents who are unsure how to help her navigate these new emotions and fears. The film, which is part of the U.S. Dramatic Competition, is based on De Araújo’s own experience of seeing something scarring at that age.

    The next film, Gregg Araki’s “I Want Your Sex,” will bring a distinct change in tone to the Eccles. It’s the story of a college graduate in his early 20s (played by Cooper Hoffman ) who gets his first job as a kind of intern/assistant to a renowned art world provocateur named Erika Tracy (Wilde), who Arkai described as “bold, daring and very controversial,” a cross between Robert Mapplethorpe and Madonna.

    “It’s the story of their affairs and the impact it has on this kid’s life and how it kind of turns his whole world upside down,” Araki told The Associated Press. “It’s fun, it’s colorful, it’s sexy. And it’s a ride.”

    It’s a film that Araki has been working on for over 10 years, as it evolved from a comic “Fifty Shades of Grey” with a female intern to what it is now.

    “After #MeToo and Harvey Weinstein, all the stuff that was going on, it was literally like, I don’t really want to see a woman getting dragged around by the hair,” Araki said. “I don’t want to seed that kind of patriarchal dynamic, even if it’s consensual.”

    Flipping the gender roles and making the young intern a man made the movie more interesting for Araki, “as a filmmaker who has always been heavily influenced by feminist film theory and feminism in general,” he said.

    At the same time, he was absorbing news stories about Gen Z and how they don’t have sex or relationships anymore and a new dynamic emerged.

    “What I knew as an old person, as an old-timer, in terms of socialization, dating, sex, all of this stuff that seemed to be kind of falling away,” Araki said. “And so that kind of became a major theme of the movie.”

    Things Wilde’s character says are things he has also said in interviews about sex and sexuality. Her character gets into generational debates about it. And ultimately it’s sex positive.

    “It was very important to me to make something sex positive,” Araki said. “’I Want Your Sex’ is like the opposite of ‘Babygirl,’ which I found to be very sex negative.”

    The film also features a supporting turn from Charli xcx, who was a fan of Araki and whose “Brat” album cover was partially inspired by the title credits to his film “Smiley Face.” When she heard about this new movie, he said, she asked if she could be in it. He was interested, but told her agent that she needed to do a self-tape “like everyone else” to play the part of Hoffman’s girlfriend.

    “The character is not her. That’s what’s so fun,” he said. “She’s American, she’s super uptight and kind of pill.”

    She filmed her scenes in one day, on a two-day break in the middle of her Brat tour.

    “I don’t want to give it away, but she’s in one of my favorite scenes in the whole movie where her and Cooper’s character are having kind of bad sex,” he said.

    Those who stick around at the Eccles after “I Want Your Sex” will get a Charli xcx double feature, with the world premiere of her self-referential mockumentary “The Moment,” about a rising pop star, before it hits theaters on Jan. 30.

    Earlier Friday, the world premiere of William David Caballero’s mixed-media film “TheyDream” immersed viewers in the intimate story of a Puerto Rican family learning to process grief through art. Caballero and cowriter Elaine Del Valle have screened short films at Sundance in the past but were honored to bring a full-length feature to the festival.

    “Sundance has always been about possibility for me — about artists being given space to take creative risks and tell personal stories,” Del Valle, who is also a producer on the film, told the AP. “Bringing our first feature, especially in Sundance’s final year in Utah, carries a different weight.”

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    Associated Press writer Hannah Schoenbaum contributed to this story.

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    For more coverage of the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/sundance-film-festival

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  • Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons make the case for the wild ride that is ‘Bugonia’

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    Jesse Plemons has a plea: Pause Netflix and go see “Bugonia” in the theater.

    The film, in which he plays a conspiracy theorist who kidnaps and tortures Emma Stone’s pharma CEO, believing her to be an alien, is the kind that might seem small in scope. On a certain level, it’s three people — the possibly insane mastermind Teddy (Plemons), his cousin and accomplice Don (Aidan Delbis) and their victim Michelle Fuller (Stone) — in a basement. And yet, in the hands of filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos and his collaborators, it feels big in scope too, with a booming score, raw performances, grand themes about perceptions of reality and the human experiment and an ever-escalating tension as you try to figure out whom to believe.

    “It’s a very entertaining film and a ride,” Stone said in an interview alongside her co-star. “It’s not this heavy meditation on something. There is a bit of absurdism and that stamp that he (Yorgos) puts on everything where there’s humor laced all throughout.”

    “Bugonia” arrives in select theaters this weekend on a wave of good buzz and reviews after premiering at the Venice Film Festival. But it’s also coming into a theatrical marketplace that has been, at best, tough on art films and awards hopefuls, no matter how starry or well-reviewed.

    Lanthimos’ films have broken through the noise before, especially when Stone is involved. “Poor Things” was hardly an assured box office hit, but managed to make over $117 million — over three times its production budget — by the end of its run.

    “Bugonia” marks Stone’s fourth film with Lanthimos and Plemons’ second — they both recently appeared in his “Kinds of Kindness.” And they hope it breaks the current streak of art house fizzles.

    “It’s a movie that feels made to be experienced in theaters,” Plemons said. “I’d like to talk to all the people out there right now and say, ‘You can do it. You can pause Netflix, and come back to it, but you should see this in a theater.’”

    Stone chimed in, laughing: “He said it! He said the controversial thing!”

    From ‘Save the Green Planet’ to ‘Bugonia’

    “Bugonia” is based on a 2003 Korean movie called “Save the Green Planet!” which also blended elements of science fiction and black comedy in its satirical meditation on truth and corporate misdeeds. It was the era of the coronavirus lockdowns when the idea of making an English-language version took hold, with screenwriter Will Tracy (“Succession,” “The Menu”) behind the adaptation. In Tracy’s script, the setting would switch to the U.S. and the CEO would become a woman.

    “Sometimes you make these big decisions like that and it’s not like there’s a lot of premeditation about why and gender politics and any of it,” Tracy said. “It just seemed interesting.”

    The gender switch had been made before Lanthimos came on board three years ago, but it was the kind of choice that opened up a door for him to call one of his favorites: Stone.

    “So much about the story was intriguing,” Stone said. “This sort of tightrope walk of what she’s being accused of. The tension between her and Teddy.”

    Also, she said, there was something exciting about playing the kind of boss who makes big pronouncements about staff feeling free to leave at 5:30 p.m. — unless, of course, they have work to do.

    This image released by Focus Features shows Emma Stone in a scene from "Bugonia." (Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features via AP)

    Emma Stone in “Bugonia” (Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features via AP)

    This image released by Focus Features shows Emma Stone, from left, Aidan Delbis, and Jesse Plemons in a scene from "Bugonia." (Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features via AP)

    Emma Stone, Aidan Delbis and Jesse Plemons in “Bugonia” (Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features via AP)

    “Speaking these sorts of corporate-trained platitudes was really fascinating, to learn how to sort of give the illusion of humanity and connection, but done in a way that’s obviously allowed through HR,” Stone said.

    It was Lanthimos’ idea to make the title “Bugonia,” which comes from a Greek word referring to a belief that bees were born out of the carcass of a dead ox. Teddy was always a beekeeper on the side, but suddenly they had an apt extended metaphor to play around with, too.

    The non-professional breakout star

    At Teddy’s side throughout the ordeal is Don, who seems to have his own misgivings about the plan and causing Michelle pain, but whose first loyalty is to his cousin — the only person who seems to care about him. Lanthimos wanted to cast a non-professional, neurodivergent actor in the role and worked with casting director Jennifer Venditti, who had helped make a documentary about a neurodivergent kid, to find the right person.

    Delbis, who is autistic, did not do any training before joining the cast at age 17. Some little changes to the script were made to reflect his way of speaking and his presence. But the point, Lanthimos said, was that “he would bring his own experience and perception and way of thinking and energy. And that was what was so priceless.”

    It’s perhaps the most important relationship in the film, and Plemons said that he immediately felt bonded to Delbis.

    “We just hit it off very quickly and very quickly he began to feel like my cousin that I wanted to protect and hang out with,” Plemons said.

    Fighting for a vision

    “Bugonia” is a surprisingly physical film, which everyone learned the hard way. Plemons and Stone worked with stunt coordinators for the big fights and the kidnapping scene. But she didn’t foresee just how much physicality was involved in being a captive, bloody, slathered in antihistamine cream and constantly trying to break free.

    “Generally I think it was quite a challenge for everyone because it’s such a constrained film, just being in those few locations,” Lanthimos said. “We started forgetting what day it was, and if it was day or night outside.”

    Plemons also had quite a bit of biking and running around for the exciting final 30 minutes of the film.

    “Hats off to them for putting up with my writing,” Tracy said.

    Stone, who also produced, remembered filming a scene one night in which she’s walking barefoot through a parking lot with ambulances all around her and giving Tracy some grief. What sounded fairly straightforward took on a lot of complications because they were shooting in England and the vehicles needed to be American.

    “I was like, ‘You were just sitting there in your room, and you wrote one sentence: Michelle limps across the parking and there are ambulances,’” Stone said. “It was just like, wow must be nice! We spent a lot of money on that one line you wrote. You could have cut it!” Stone said.

    She is mostly kidding. It might have been expensive, but they still did the shot. As a producer, Stone says she wants nothing more than to protect the integrity of a film, whether she’s acting in it or not.

    “The American film system is really tricky with notes and studios and so many things that come in the way of people being able to realize that vision in the fullest capacity,” Stone said. “There’s no better feeling than getting to help facilitate someone bringing their story to life in the fullest way that they can imagine it being, and trying to be their advocate throughout every step of the process.”

    She added, laughing: “Michelle Fuller.”

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  • Ty Dolla $ign returns with ‘Tycoon,’ his first solo album in five years

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    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — “It’s ‘Tycoon’ season,’” a beaming Ty Dolla $ign, declares.

    It is indeed. The inventive R&B singer has just released his fifth studio album, his first full-length solo release in five years. He chose “Tycoon” for its title because the word encompasses his current state of mind. “It’s like (being at) the top of your game,” he says. “It’s like, not only have I done all the stuff you could do in artistry, (but) there’s still more to do.”

    Call it confidence or swagger or showboating: The Grammy-nominated artist has a trove of multiplatinum records to his name from 2018 to the present, and recently, his controversial project with Kanye West, $, released two albums, “Vultures 1” and “Vultures 2” in 2024. They debuted at No. 1 and 2 on the Billboard 200, respectively.

    “Tycoon” is classic Ty Dolla $ign. The album is what he’s made a name for himself doing: a collection of ceaselessly catchy, NSFW R&B anthems about lust and love (both mostly lechery), stacked with A-list collaborations: Quavo,Juicy J, 2 Chainz, Tyga, Travis Scott, Chloë — the list goes on.

    Also among them: Rappers Kodak Black and Ty Dolla $ign’s longtime kindred spirit YG. (Ty Dolla $ign and YG have worked together for a number of years, certainly going back to 2010’s “Toot It & Boot It.”) For his latest album, the trio teamed up for “SMILE BODY PRETTY FACE.” It was one of the last songs to make “Tycoon,” says Ty Dolla $ign, “But when we started messing with the beat. I was like, ‘This has got to be YG.’”

    There’s a romantic element to the song — with some of his explicitly sexual posturing. The same can be said about the lead single to “Tycoon,” “All In,” where Ty Dolla $ign’s rich baritone considers devotion to a partner. “They say love don’t cost a thing,” he swoons on the chorus. “And if it did, I’d go all in.”

    “I’m always loving something,” he says. “It hasn’t all the way worked out for me yet.” Love, then, is still a constant source of inspiration — enriched by the song’s sample of Wayne Wonders’ 2002 reggae fusion track “No Letting Go.”

    For Ty Dolla $ign, this new era means being a business “Tycoon” as well. He’s taken on his fair share of industry endeavors — like launching a label, EZMNY, with Motown Records executive Shawn Barron — and experiencing immediate success with its first signing, the R&B upstart Leon Thomas. His single, “Mutt,” hit No. 11 on the all-genre Billboard Hot 100 and No. 1 on its Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

    Thomas told AP earlier this year about working with Ty Dolla $ign: “I was around some epic legends in the field, and I feel like the best teacher is experience.”

    “My goal there, with EZMNY, is to give the real artists a chance. Myself, I didn’t make it until I was 27 and I was always good. I was always making music,” Ty Dolla $ign says. “And I just wanted to reach back to people that are actually great.”

    “There’s definitely going to be a comeback in R&B very soon,” he adds. “We’re talking Leon specifically.”

    As for what else the future holds, it still remains to be seen if the oft-rumored “Vultures 3” will be released. “There was a lot of music that was done. It could have been out at the time,” Ty Dolla $ign deflects. “I feel like we made the best music that was out at the time. I feel like we went No. 1, and it was a successful project, and it was fun … That was like a cool experience, to see that you could just do everything on your own time.”

    Could the duo reunite? “Who knows what may happen in the future?” he says. “I’m open to whatever.”

    For now, “It’s ‘Tycoon’ time,” he says. Soon, Ty Dolla $ign will tour the album. Later down the line, his new documentary — titled “Still Free TC,” 10 years after his debut album “Free TC” — will hopefully get a wider release. It premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival this year.

    “Still Free TC” is about his brother, Big TC, who is currently incarcerated on a life sentence for murder — wrongfully so, according to the singer. But it also tells Ty Dolla $ign’s story in intimate detail. It’s about his journey to the top and the mass incarceration system that still affects his family.

    “I’ve had a lot of friends and fans tell me that, like, ‘Yeah, you never show anybody for real. You never let anybody in.’ So, this is the time where I let everybody in,” he says of the film. “I just feel like the people need to see it.”

    And in the meantime, they’ll have “Tycoon” to dive into.

    “I just want people to feel inspired after they hear it. I want them to believe in themselves after they hear it,” he says. “And believe in me. I’m always going to give you the best of the best.”

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  • Pamela Anderson leads the way for women who choose to go makeup free

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    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — Pamela Anderson has nothing against makeup. It’s just that she’s been there, done that in her younger years. That’s why now, at 58, she’s attending fashion shows and film premieres with a blissfully bare face.

    It’s a look, especially for older women, that serves to plague and perplex. Do we chase youth (and relevancy) with a full face, or do we foster radiant skin and march on makeup free?

    “I’m not trying to be the prettiest girl in the room,” Anderson told Vogue ahead of a recent show she attended during Paris Fashion Week. “I feel like it’s just freedom. It’s like a relief.”

    Down here in the non-celebrity world, is it just as easy and comfortable to go makeup free? Some proponents of the look, along with style and beauty experts, weigh in.

    Women, particularly older women, are not universally giving up makeup, but Anderson, Alicia Keys and other celebrities who have publicly shown off bare faces have certainly inspired some to cast it off.

    Working women, however, acknowledge difficulties doing that on the job — especially in traditional, less creative work spaces.

    “I do still think that there are some politics associated with it. More around feeling and looking polished,” said Deborah Borg, the chief of human resources for a creative-leaning company that has roughly 25,000 employees.

    She said she’s seen more women come into work makeup-free since COVID, and thinks the pandemic significantly altered the workplace dynamic.

    Borg, 49, gave up makeup four years ago, save an occasional swipe of her bold, signature red lipstick. At Dalya, a cozy clothing shop in New York’s trendy Soho neighborhood, she lent herself as a model to demonstrate how to help one’s bare skin glow and how to use attire and accessories to accentuate the look.

    Makeup artist Rebecca Robles counseled Borg and others with mature skin to think hydration when choosing products to make the most of their bare faces.

    Robles recommends a five-step workday routine: A gentle cleanser that doesn’t strip the skin; a vitamin C serum to brighten and mitigate fine lines; a moisturizer with sun protection; a separate broad-spectrum sunscreen for an extra boost (don’t forget to apply that to the ears); and a glossy lip balm for a bit of added polish.

    No mascara? No problem. Use a lash curler to offer a bit of pop to the eye, Robles said. And gently brush brows into place to complete the look.

    Find products with hyaluronic acid and ceramides, Robles suggests, and always swipe up with skincare products. Minimize tugging and pulling on the skin.

    “When your skin is glowing, one thing that’s really fun to keep in mind is that light reflects off that moisture in the skin and can help blur out any fine lines or enlarged pores. So it’s win-win,” Robles said.

    She advised that each product should sit for a minute or two before the next step is applied.

    Borg emphasized the ease of her morning routine since going makeup free. She used to spend about 30 minutes just on makeup. Now, she does hair and face in half that time.

    Natalie Tincher, a personal stylist and founder of Bu Style, praised Anderson, Keys and other celebrities who have gone without makeup both publicly and on social media.

    “They look beautiful and they’re so confident in their natural persona and who they are that I feel like it’s really giving an example for all of us women to say, ‘Hey, what am I hiding? I don’t have to do that. I can make the choice if I want to go no makeup, minimal makeup, full glam. I can have those choices,’” she said.

    For her clients going makeup free, she uses a three-prong approach.

    First, with clothes, “use a lot of color. I call it our filter,” Tincher said.

    Secondly, play with texture; it determines how light will be reflected. “So if you have something more matte, that is going to create a more soft lighting on you. If you have more silk satin, like say something like a blouse, it’s going to be more like a laser beam,” she said.

    Finally, accessorize. Tincher said added touches like lapel pins, earrings and necklaces can provide a finished polish — especially if that polish is still expected at work. A considered style can offset judgments about going makeup free, she said.

    “Think of your outfit as the big picture. When you walk in, what is the statement that it’s making? It’s not just about one part of you, it’s your whole presence in a room,” she said.

    Colleen Gehoski Steinman, who lives near Lansing, Michigan, recently pivoted from a career in public relations and fundraising to professional sewing. During the pandemic, she stopped coloring her hair, then gave up wearing makeup much of the time.

    But at 59, she’s not a stickler about it if she’s going to be in lighting that will wash her out.

    “This is who we really are, and you can be beautiful just as you are,” Steinman said.

    In South Carolina, Cate Chapman manages a bagel shop and sells her homemade custards at farmers markets in the Greenville area. As a teen, she was all-in on makeup but has been happily free of it since the early 1990s.

    “I just thought, for one, makeup is expensive,” said Chapman, 57. “Putting it on is time-consuming. As a female, I’m making less, and my male counterparts don’t have to put out this expense. It isn’t fair. It feels expected, and it’s not right.”

    Makeup, she said, “felt like prison.” She stopped gradually, giving up foundation first. But still, she’s not above applying a bit of mascara on special occasions.

    “If you enjoy it, do it,” Chapman said. “But if you feel like a slave to it, let it go.”

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  • Another ‘Knives Out’ makes another raucous premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival

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    TORONTO — For the third time, the knives were out at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    Rian Johnson on Saturday night premiered the third movie in his whodunit series, “Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery.” Like the previous two movies, “Knives Out” and “Glass Onion,” Johnson brought a cavalcade of stars to Toronto’s Princess of Wales Theatre for what was easily the hottest ticket of the festival.

    “This is my favorite place to be in the world,” said Johnson, recalling the similar TIFF first weekend premieres of his first two mysteries.

    “Wake Up, Dead Man” is arguably Johnson’s darkest, most intricate and most star-studded “Knives Out” mystery yet. It includes plenty of the quips that have characterized the first two movies (there are “Star Wars” and “Scooby Doo” references), but the film is also more ambitiously existential.

    Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc returns for a murder case involving a local church, with themes of truth, lies and grace threaded throughout. Josh O’Connor stars a young priest named Jud Duplenticy, with Josh Brolin as the Monsignor and Glenn Close as a devout parishioner. The cast also includes Mila Kunis, Jeremy Renner, Daryl McCormack, Andrew Scott, Kerry Washington, Thomas Haden Church and Cailee Spaeny.

    “The first one was kind of a cozy, Agatha Christie family mystery. The second one was a big blow-out vacation mystery. And with this third one, we’re going back to the roots of the genre,” Johnson said. “And the roots of genre actually lie in Edgar Allan Poe. A little gothic. We’re going to go by way of Poe into some John Dickson Carr. We’re going to veer into some G.K. Chesterton with the Father Brown mysteries. And we’re going to go back to church.”

    After the screening, the cast spoke about their joy at being inducted into Johnson’s “Knives Out” ensembles. Renner said it was “like winning the lottery.” Washington compared it to an all-star team.

    “Putting this many stars into one film is literally like herding cats,” said a beaming Craig.

    After the first “Knives Out” was released in 2019 by Lionsgate, grossing $312 million worldwide, Netflix scooped up the sequels in a $400 million package.

    Though Netflix has prioritized its streaming platform over theatrical, it gave “Glass Onion: Knives Out 2” a run in 696 theaters in 2022, including the biggest chains AMC, Regal and Cinemark. Though much smaller than a traditional theatrical opening (big productions typically launch in 3,000 to 4,000 theaters), the movie was estimated to gross $15 million in its first week.

    Wake Up Dead Man” will open in select theaters Nov. 26 for a two-week run before it begins streaming on Dec. 12.

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  • Kathryn Bigelow unveils political thriller at Venice Film Festival

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    VENICE, Italy — VENICE, Italy (AP) — Kathryn Bigelow tackles geopolitics in her new film “A House of Dynamite,” which has its world premiere on Tuesday at the Venice Film Festival.

    The film is about an imminent missile strike on the U.S., from an unknown aggressor, and how the White House responds.

    “I grew up in an era when hiding under your school desk was considered the go-to protocol for surviving an atomic bomb,” Bigelow said in her director’s statement. “Today, the danger has only escalated. Multiple nations possess enough nuclear weapons to end civilization within minutes. And yet, there’s a kind of collective numbness — a quiet normalization of the unthinkable.”

    She added that she wanted to make a film that confronts this paradox — “to explore the madness of a world that lives under the constant shadow of annihilation, yet rarely speaks of it.”

    It’s Bigelow’s first film since the 2017 release of “Detroit.” Her most acclaimed films have been politically themed, from “The Hurt Locker,” for which she became the first woman to win the best director Oscar, to “Zero Dark Thirty.”

    “A House of Dynamite” was written by former NBC News President Noah Oppenheim, who won best screenplay at the festival for “Jackie” in 2016.

    “A House of Dynamite” is one of three Netflix films playing in competition, alongside Guillermo del Toro’s classically gothic “Frankenstein” and Noah Baumbach’s Hollywood drama “Jay Kelly.” The streamer still doesn’t have a best picture win in its arsenal, and Venice has proved itself to be a solid launching pad for awards hopefuls.

    The film, which will be released in theaters on Oct. 10 before streaming on Oct. 24, stars Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, and boasts a large supporting cast, including Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos and Greta Lee.

    The Venice awards, which will be decided on by the Alexander Payne-led jury, will be handed out at the close of the festival on Sept. 6.

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    For more coverage of the 2025 Venice Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival

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  • Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Frankenstein’ to premiere at Venice with Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi

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    VENICE, Italy — Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi are expected at the Venice Film Festival Saturday for the world premiere of Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein,” the kickoff to what’s expected to be the film’s major awards season push.

    Isaac plays Victor Frankenstein and Elordi is the monster in this adaptation of Mary Shelley’s classic novel, which del Toro has been dreaming about making for decades.

    “It’s the movie that I’ve been in training for 30 years to do,” del Toro told The Associated Press recently.

    There may be some disruption outside of the red carpet, however, as an anti-war march is planned to take place that evening, ending near the festival. Organizers hope to turn the spotlight to Gaza.

    The last time del Toro was at Venice was with “The Shape of Water” in 2017, which won the festival’s top prize that year before going on to pick up the best picture and best director Oscar in 2018. Netflix does not yet have a best picture winner in their arsenal, but is betting big on “Frankenstein.” Del Toro’s last film, “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio,” won the streamer its first best animated film Oscar.

    Like “The Shape of Water,” “Frankenstein” is up for the big awards at Venice, where it will be competing with films like Yorgos Lanthimos’s “Bugonia,”Kathryn Bigelow’s “A House of Dynamite,” Park Chan-wook’s “No Other Choice” and Kaouther Ben Hania’s “The Voice of Hind Rajab.” Winners will be announced by the Alexander Payne-led jury on Sept. 6.

    Netflix plans to release “Frankenstein” in theaters on Oct. 17 before it comes to streaming Nov. 7.

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2025 Venice Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival.

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  • Venice Film Festival kicks off with Paolo Sorrentino’s ‘La Grazia’

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    VENICE, Italy — The Venice Film Festival is kicking off with the world premiere of Paolo Sorrentino’s “La Grazia” on Wednesday.

    The 82nd edition of the glamourous international film festival is playing host to many Hollywood stars, including George Clooney, Julia Roberts and Dwayne Johnson, and famed auteurs, from Guillermo del Toro to Kathryn Bigelow, who all have films debuting over the next 10 days.

    The festival, which takes place on the Lido, chose to open with the newest film from one of Italy’s most revered working filmmakers. “La Grazia” stars Sorrentino’s longtime collaborator Toni Servillo, although the plot has remained under wraps.

    Venice Film Festival director Alberto Barbera told The Associated Press that “La Grazia” took them by surprise.

    “It’s a different Sorrentino from what we are used to,” Barbera said. “Far less baroque and formalistic than the previous films he made. It’s a very unexpected story.”

    Sorrentino, best known for his Oscar-winning film “The Great Beauty,” made his debut at the Venice Film Festival 24 years ago with the film “One Man Up.” He also won the Silver Lion prize in 2021 for “The Hand of God,” which went on to be nominated for an Oscar. Many films that premiere at Venice go on to Oscar nominations and wins.

    Before the glitzy world premiere, anti-war protesters also plan to hold a news conference in front of the famed red carpet to put a spotlight on Gaza.

    “La Grazia” is one of the 21 films playing in the festival’s main competition. Other titles vying for the prestigious Golden Lion prize include del Toro’s “Frankenstein,” Bigelow’s “A House of Dynamite,” Yorgos Lanthimos’s “Bugonia,” Benny Safdie’s “The Smashing Machine” and Kaouther Ben Hania’s “The Voice of Hind Rajab.

    The festival runs through Sept. 6.

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2025 Venice Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival.

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  • Memorable moments from the Venice Film Festival and beyond

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    VENICE, Italy — No Hollywood star seems as intrinsically tied to Venice as George Clooney.

    Twenty-seven years ago he attended his first Venice Film Festival with the instant classic “Out of Sight”; 20 years ago, it’s where he debuted his sophomore film, “Good Night, and Good Luck,” which earned him his first best director nomination; and 11 years ago, it’s where he exchanged vows with then Amal Alamuddin, at the Aman Venice, a five-star hotel perched alongside the Grand Canal.

    Venice is a city that he, like many, thinks is one of the most beautiful in the world. Unlike most people, he also owns 15-bedroom villa a few hours away on Lake Como that famously co-starred in “Ocean’s Twelve.”

    This year he’ll be back on the Lido again with Noah Baumbach’s “Jay Kelly,” in which he plays a middle-aged movie star on a journey through Europe with his manager, played by Adam Sandler. And his longtime friend and oft co-star Julia Roberts is making her Venice debut this year with “After the Hunt.”

    Here are some of Clooney’s most memorable Venice moments.

    As legend has it, Clooney’s long term love affair with Venice may have begun with the festival’s premiere of Steven Soderbergh’s Elmore Leonard adaptation “Out of Sight.” Then 37 and doing press alongside Jennifer Lopez, the actor would also make another big jump soon: Leaving “ER” that February.

    This Coen brothers joint, co-starring Catherine Zeta-Jones, premiered out of competition at the 60th Venice Film Festival, alongside titles like “Matchstick Men,” “Once Upon a Time in Mexico” and “The Dreamers.” Clooney’s nearby Italian residence was already as famous as him, and a stakeout spot for amateur and professional paparazzi.

    In a profile that fall, while shooting “Ocean’s Twelve,” Vanity Fair writer Ned Zeman observed: “That an affable, self-effacing Kentucky-born Hollywood actor is fast becoming the most popular public figure in Italy says a little about Italy and a lot about Clooney, who isn’t Italian, doesn’t speak Italian, and lives here only in summertime.”

    Clooney’s acclaimed black-and-white dramatization of journalist Edward R. Murrow’s clash with Joseph McCarthy began its successful run in competition at the 62nd Venice Film Festival. Though it lost the Golden Lion to Ang Lee’s “Brokeback Mountain,” it did go on to pick up six Oscar nominations including for Clooney’s directing.

    During the trip, he also inspired a cocktail still served at the ritzy Belmond Hotel Cipriani on Giudecca. One night he retreated to the hotel’s Gabbiano Bar where his friend, the legendary bar manager Walter Bolzonella, mixed him a drink of lemon, sugar, vodka, cranberry juice, ginger and Angostura bitters and named it Buona Notte in honor of the film. The two would later name a prosecco, passionfruit and elderflower cocktail La Nina after Clooney’s mother, which was served at his wedding.

    Tony Gilroy’s “Michael Clayton,” which nabbed Clooney an Oscar nomination for his turn as the titular law firm fixer, played in competition at Venice. The top prize went again to an Ang Lee film: “Lust, Caution,” which also beat out the likes of “I’m Not There,” “Atonement” and “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.”

    This Coen brothers comedy featuring Clooney and Brad Pitt opted to debut out of competition in the opening night slot. He said it completed his “trilogy of idiots” that he’d played for the Coens, including “Intolerable Cruelty” and “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” “Looking at the parts we are playing, I’m very concerned about what you think of us,” Clooney said at the press conference. Pitt, who’d won the festival’s acting prize the year prior, added: “Like George … I’m not sure if I should be flattered or insulted.”

    Another opening night, out of competition slot debut for this Clooney-directed campaign thriller starring Ryan Gosling and Philip Seymour Hoffman. As usual, Clooney was peppered with political questions in which he observed that, “it’s a very difficult time to govern.”

    Alfonso Cuarón’s “Gravity” opened the 70th edition of the Venice Film Festival before going on to win seven Oscars. Clooney, of course, attended the premiere alongside Sandra Bullock and he was self-deprecating about his role: “There were only two parts and Sandy had the other one, so I felt like this was the only one I could get away with.”

    The canals were packed with paparazzi for the nuptials of one of Hollywood’s favorite bachelors. On Sept. 27, Clooney, then 53, and Alamuddin, then 36, exchanged vows in front of 100 of their closest friends and family, including Bono and Matt Damon, at the luxury hotel Aman Grand Canal, originally a grand palazzo built in 1550. She wore a custom Oscar de la Renta dress, of French lace, pearls and diamanté accents. He wore a black wool/cashmere Giorgio Armani tuxedo.

    Clooney returned to the festival with another of his directing projects, “Suburbicon,” a dark comedic satire about a seemingly idyllic 1950s community with Damon and Julianne Moore. This festival was especially notable for it being the Clooneys’ first public appearance since the birth of their twins, Alexander and Ella, a few months prior.

    This time George was the plus one to Amal, who was receiving an award from the Diane von Furstenberg and The Diller-von Furstenberg Family Foundation for her work as a human rights lawyer. The power couple gave the festival some much-needed star power amid the actors strike with an appearance at the adjacent DVF Awards. “I am here in Venice with my husband; he is a rising star,” she said that night. “I just wanted to say, you, my love, like this city, take my breath away.”

    Clooney and Pitt reunited for the Jon Watts action comedy “Wolfs,” that played out of competition. But the spotlight was less on the film and more on the off-screen drama of the AppleTV+ produced film only getting a limited theatrical release, and his then-recent New York Times op-ed urging President Joe Biden to end his reelection bid.

    “The person who should be applauded is the president who did the most selfless thing anyone’s done since George Washington,” Clooney said. “All the machinations that got us there, none of that’s going to be remembered. And it shouldn’t be. What should be remembered is the selfless act.”

    ___

    For ongoing coverage of the 2025 Venice Film Festival, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival

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  • Almodóvar returns to Venice with ‘The Room Next Door’ alongside Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore

    Almodóvar returns to Venice with ‘The Room Next Door’ alongside Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore

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    VENICE, Italy — Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar returned to the Venice Film Festival with stars Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore. Their film, “The Room Next Door,” had its world premiere on the Lido Monday evening, where it received a standing ovation for nearly 20 minutes.

    Though a new Almodóvar film is always an event for cinephiles, this one has special significance: It’s his English-language debut.

    “My insecurity disappeared after the first table read with the actresses, with the exchange of the first indications,” he wrote in his director’s statement. “The language wasn’t going to be a problem, and not because I master English, but because of the total disposition of the whole cast to understand me and to make it easy for me to understand them.”

    Moore and Swinton play disconnected friends, who met in their youths at a magazine job, and whose lives took different paths. Ingrid (Moore) wrote novels. Martha (Swinton) became a war reporter. And now after years apart, they meet again, in New York, when Ingrid finds out Martha has cancer and is in a nearby hospital.

    Over the next weeks and months, they reconnect, learning about one another’s lives and Martha’s estranged daughter through a series of revealing conversations.

    Before the film’s premiere, Swinton said that it would never have occurred to her that Almodóvar might eventually find a space for her in one of his films. She said she has “worshipped in his high church” ever since seeing “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown” in the late 1980s in London. In Almodóvar was a kindred artistic spirit, she thought.

    “I still feel like a student seeing his first film,” Swinton said.

    But she was English and he worked solely in Spanish. The idea of collaborating seemed like a fantasy only. Then one day, she said, she got up the nerve to say something to him.

    “I said, ‘Listen I’ll learn Spanish for you, you can make me mute,’” Swinton said. “Characteristically, he laughed.”

    Moore added: “I don’t know how I managed to walk into this world, but I felt lucky that he chose me.”

    Almodóvar’s last Venice appearance was in 2021, where he presented the film “Parallel Mothers,” for which Penelope Cruz won its best actress prize. In 2019, Venice also gave him a lifetime achievement award. But his history with Venice stretches back 40 years.

    “I was born as a film director in 1983 in Venice,” he said. A few years later, he’d return with the classic “Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.”

    Of his latest, he wrote “Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore carry the weight of the whole film on their shoulders, and they are a spectacle. I have been fortunate in that both give a veritable recital. At times during shooting, both the crew and I were on the verge of tears watching them. It was a very moving shoot and, in some way, blessed.”

    Though death looms in the film, when Martha asks Ingrid to join her in a house upstate for her final days, all felt that it’s a film about life.

    “We talked a lot about life, but we didn’t really talk about death. What can you say? You can talk about dying,” Swinton said. “This film is a portrait of self-determination … This feeling of (death) being a celebration felt for me very real and very relatable and I can’t say that I wouldn’t act in the same way if I was in her shoes.”

    Both Swinton and Moore were excited to be in a film that spotlighted a female friendship between two women at their ages.

    “We very, very rarely see a story of female friendship and especially a story about female friends who are older,” Moore said. “The importance that he shows us is so unusual and was so moving to me that he portrayed this relationship as so profound, because it is.”

    The film is playing in competition at the 81st edition of the Venice Film Festival, alongside the likes of “Maria” and the yet-to-premiere “Queer” and “Joker: Folie à Deux.” Winners will be announced on Sept. 7.

    Sony Pictures Classics will release “The Room Next Door” in theaters in December.

    ___

    More coverage of the 2024 Venice Film Festival: https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival

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  • Venice Film Festival welcomes Pitt and Clooney, and their new film ‘Wolfs’

    Venice Film Festival welcomes Pitt and Clooney, and their new film ‘Wolfs’

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    VENICE, Italy — VENICE, Italy (AP) — George Clooney and Brad Pitt returned to the Venice Film Festival on Sunday for the world premiere of “Wolfs.”

    Before hitting the red carpet, the Hollywood stars reflected on reuniting, the rise of streaming and Clooney’s New York Times op-ed urging President Joe Biden to end his reelection bid.

    Asked about the impact of his piece, Clooney said he’d not yet had to answer that question.

    “The person who should be applauded is the president who did the most selfless thing anyone’s done since George Washington,” Clooney said. “All the machinations that got us there, none of that’s going to be remembered. And it shouldn’t be. What should be remembered is the selfless act.”

    Clooney continued: “It’s very hard to let go of power. We know that. We’ve seen that all around the world. For someone to say, I think there’s a better way forward? All credit goes to him.”

    Most of the discussion was focused on the film, however, an old school action thriller directed by Jon Watts, in which they play lone wolf fixers unhappy to have been hired for the same job to cover up a bloody mess involving a district attorney (played by Amy Ryan).

    The film will have a limited theatrical release, starting Sept. 20, before hitting Apple TV+ on Sept. 27. Apple TV+ acquired “Wolfs” in a competitive bidding war, beating out both traditional studios and rival streaming services.

    Deadline reported in 2021 that the understanding was that it would come with a robust theatrical release, something the stars may have also forfeited money to ensure, the trade publication said. Then, several weeks ago the streamer announced different plans: Theatrical would be limited. Streaming would be quick.

    Clooney confirmed that they did forfeit some of their salaries to guarantee a theatrical release and that it’s a “bummer” that it won’t be wider than a few hundred theaters.

    “We would have liked it, we wanted it. That’s why Brad and I gave some of our money back,” he said, adding that a report in the New York Times overestimated the dollar amount of their salaries by millions.

    Far from being anti-streaming, however, Clooney said that everyone is simply finding their way during this revolution. There are bumps and mistakes, but there’s also much more opportunities for actors, he said.

    “Streaming, we need it, our industry needs it,” Clooney said. “They also benefit from having films released … and we’re figuring it out, we haven’t gotten it figured out yet.”

    Producer and Plan B executive Jeremy Kliner, who has worked with Pitt for over 20 years, said that they make films believing in their shelf lives, and that they’re doing something worthwhile.

    Pitt added: “I think we’ll always be romantic about the theatrical experience but at the same time I love the existence of streamers … it’s a delicate balance. It’ll right itself.”

    Though both regulars at the picturesque festival on their own, with Clooney’s premieres including “Gravity” and “Good Night and Good Luck,” and “Ad Astra” and “The Assassination of Jesse James…” among Pitt’s, only once have they walked the carpet together. No, it wasn’t for an Ocean’s film. It was in 2008, for the premiere of “Burn After Reading,” the madcap Coen brothers’ farce in which they share one memorable scene.

    “In ‘Burn After Reading’ I got the extreme pleasure of shooting him in the face and I thought maybe we’d try it again 15 years later,” Clooney said with a laugh.

    The two teased one another about each other’s age and relevance, with Clooney joking that Pitt is 74 and lucky to be working at his age. (Clooney, for the record, is 63. Pitt is 60.)

    Pitt was waiting for a good idea to reunite with Clooney on screen and thought the idea of two cleaners who think they’re the best sounded fun. Their years of working together made their banter, and overlapping dialogue, natural to do.

    “As I get older, just working with the people that I just really enjoy spending time with has become really important to me,” Pitt said.

    When they got the script, they said Watts hadn’t specified who was playing which part so Pitt and Clooney got on the phone and figured it out for themselves.

    Pitt arrived at the festival just days apart from his ex, Angelina Jolie, who received praise for her turn as opera singer Maria Callas in Pablo Larraín’s “Maria” and left Italy for another festival soon after.

    Pitt and Jolie had been romantic partners for a decade when they married in 2014. Jolie filed for divorce in 2016, and a judge declared them single in 2019, but the divorce case has not been finalized with custody and financial issues still in dispute. Several weeks ago, a Los Angeles court granted a petition from the third-eldest child of the former couple to legally change her name from Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt to Shiloh Nouvel Jolie.

    The film’s director, who catapulted from indies to the Tom Holland Spider-Man films, said in a director’s statement that this film is him trying to get back to street level after “seven years of swinging from skyscrapers and jumping through multiverse portals.” He was unable to speak about the film with his stars after testing positive for COVID-19.

    “He flew all the way here and then he got COVID,” Clooney said. “So now we’re all going to get it.”

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2024 Venice Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/venice-film-festival

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  • Holy Smokeshows: ‘The Deliverance’ Cast Stylishly Serve At Los Angeles Premiere

    Holy Smokeshows: ‘The Deliverance’ Cast Stylishly Serve At Los Angeles Premiere

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    Stars of Lee Daniels’ new Netflix film The Deliverance including Andra Day, Glenn Close and Mo’Nique attended the movie’s L.A. premiere.

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Cast Of The Deliverance Celebrate The Film’s Los Angeles Premiere

    The Deliverance stars Andra Day as Ebony Jackson as a struggling single mother fighting her own personal demons when she moves her three kids and mother into a new home for a fresh start only to discover the place is basically the devil’s playground. The project also stars Anthony B. Jenkins, Miss Lawrence, Demi Singleton, Tasha Smith, with Omar Epps, Caleb McLaughlin, and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor

    Check out the trailer below:

    Don’t you love when stars of a film show up stylish and super glamorous after spending all their time on screen looking like they’ve been through hell? We know we do.

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Wednesday, August 28, Netflix hosted the Los Angeles premiere and post-reception of THE DELIVERANCE at The Tudum Theater. In attendance were director Lee Daniels, cast Andra Day, Glenn Close, Mo’Nique, Demi Singleton, Anthony B. Jenkins, Miss Lawrence, Colleen Camp, and producers Tucker Tooley, Pamela Williams, Jackson Nguyen, and Todd Crites.

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

     

    Andra definitely came to slay.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Glenn Close wasn’t playing any games with you honey — on or offscreen. Do you like? Or is the coat too dramatic? Personally, we’re always here for Glenn Close being a drama queen.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Isn’t she lovely? It seems like Demi Singleton is growing up right before our eyes, but we appreciate that even in all red she kept it very demure and very mindful.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    We’re also big fans of Miss Lawrence unleashing this wild animal-inspired ‘fit. You like?

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Wait until you see the work this young man Anthony B. Jenkins put in!

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Lee knows he picked the right one!

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Tabitha Brown isn’t in the film, but she showed up to the premiere looking like a bag of money in head-to-toe Gucci. Definitely a bold statement being made here.

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Tab posed for a photo with Mo’Nique and Loni Love.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

     

    We really can tell this cast and crew had a TIME making this film. It’s amazing to see Lee and Mo’Nique back on great terms after their past fallout.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Glenn was right at home with her co-stars.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    We talked the Glenn and Andra about their mother-daughter dynamic, but it’s incredible to see Andra with Demi, who plays her daughter in the film.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    True characters.

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    Nothing like when work friends become work family right?

     

    The Deliverance Los Angeles Premiere

    Source: Presley Ann / Getty Images for Netflix / Netflix

    The Deliverance is in select theaters now and arrives on Netflix August 30.

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  • Today in History: August 7, Twin Tower tightrope walk

    Today in History: August 7, Twin Tower tightrope walk

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    The Associated Press

    Today is Wednesday, Aug. 7, the 220th day of 2024. There are 146 days left in the year.

    Today in history:

    On Aug. 7, 1974, French highwire artist Philippe Petit performed an unapproved tightrope walk between the two towers of the World Trade Center in New York, over 1,300 feet above the ground; the event would be chronicled in the Academy Award-winning documentary film “Man on Wire.”

    Also on this date:

    In 1789, the U.S. Department of War was established by Congress.

    In 1942, U.S. and other allied forces landed at Guadalcanal, marking the start of the first major allied offensive in the Pacific during World War II.

    In 1960, Cote d’Ivoire gained independence from France.

    In 1964, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin resolution, giving President Lyndon B. Johnson broad powers in dealing with reported North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces.

    In 1971, the Apollo 15 moon mission ended successfully as its command module splashed down in the Pacific Ocean.

    In 1978, President Jimmy Carter declared the Love Canal environmental disaster in Niagara Falls, N.Y. a federal health emergency; it would later top the initial list of Superfund cleanup sites.

    In 1989, a plane carrying U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Texas, and 15 others disappeared over Ethiopia. (The wreckage of the plane was found six days later; there were no survivors.)

    In 1990, President George H.W. Bush ordered U.S. troops and warplanes to Saudi Arabia to guard the oil-rich desert kingdom against a possible invasion by Iraq.

    In 1998, terrorist bombs at U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.

    In 2007, San Francisco’s Barry Bonds hit home run No. 756 to break Hank Aaron’s storied record with one out in the fifth inning of a game against the Washington Nationals, who won, 8-6.

    In 2012, to avoid a possible death penalty, Jared Lee Loughner agreed to spend the rest of his life in prison, accepting that he went on a deadly shooting rampage at an Arizona political gathering in 2011 that left six people dead and 13 injured, including U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords.

    In 2015, Colorado theater shooter James Holmes was spared the death penalty in favor of life in prison after a jury in Centennial failed to agree on whether he should be executed for his murderous attack on a packed movie premiere that left 12 people dead.

    Today’s birthdays: Singer Lana Cantrell is 81. Former FBI Director Robert Mueller and actors John Glover and David Rasche are 80. Former diplomat, talk show host and activist Alan Keyes and country singer Rodney Crowell are 74. Actor Caroline Aaron and comedian Alexei Sayle are 72. Actor Wayne Knight is 69. Rock singer Bruce Dickinson and marathon runner Alberto Salazar are 66. Actor David Duchovny is 64. Actor Delane Matthews is 63. Actor Harold Perrineau and jazz musician Marcus Roberts are 61. Country singer Raul Malo is 59. Actor David Mann is 58.

    Actor Charlotte Lewis is 57. Actor Sydney Penny is 53. Actor Greg Serano is 52. Actor Michael Shannon is 50. Actor Charlize Theron is 49. Rock musician Barry Kerch is 48. Actor Eric Johnson is 45. Actor Randy Wayne is 43. Actor-writer Brit Marling is 42. NHL center Sidney Crosby is 37. MLB All-Star Mike Trout is 33. Actor Liam James is 28.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    By The Associated Press

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  • Celine Dion makes musical comeback at Paris Olympics with Eiffel Tower serenade

    Celine Dion makes musical comeback at Paris Olympics with Eiffel Tower serenade

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    PARIS (AP) — Celine Dion made a triumphant return Friday with a very public performance: closing out the Paris Olympics’ opening ceremony from the Eiffel Tower.

    Nearly two years after revealing her stiff person syndrome diagnosis, Dion belted Edith Piaf’s “Hymne à l’amour” (“Hymn to Love”) as the finale of the roughly four-hour spectacle. Her appearance had been teased for weeks, but organizers and Dion’s representatives had refused to confirm whether she was performing.

    On a page dedicated to Dior’s contributions to the opening ceremony, the media guide referred to “a world star, for a purely grandiose, superbly scintillating finale.”

    Dion had been absent from the stage since 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic forced the postponement of her tour to 2022. That tour was eventually suspended in the wake of her diagnosis.

    The rare neurological disorder causes rigid muscles and painful muscle spasms, which were affecting Dion’s ability to walk and sing. In June, at the premiere of the documentary “I Am: Celine Dion,” she told The Associated Press that returning required therapy, “physically, mentally, emotionally, vocally.”

    “So that’s why it takes a while. But absolutely why we’re doing this because I’m already a little bit back,” she said then.

    Even before the documentary’s release, Dion had taken steps toward a comeback. In February, she made another surprise appearance, at the Grammy Awards, where she presented the final award of the night to a standing ovation.

    For Friday’s performance, Dion’s pearl outfit was indeed designed by Dior. Speaking on French television, the Paris organizing committee’s director of design and costume for ceremonies, Daphné Bürki, recalled Dion’s enthusiasm for the opportunity.

    “When we called Celine Dion one year ago she said yes straight away,” Bürki said.

    Dion is not actually French — the French Canadian is from Quebec — but she has a strong connection to the country and the Olympics. Dion’s first language is French, and she has dominated the charts in France and other French-speaking countries. (She also won the 1988 Eurovision Song Contest with a French-language song … representing Switzerland.) And early in her English-language career — even before “My Heart Will Go On” from “Titanic” — she was tapped to perform “The Power of The Dream,” the theme song for the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

    Dion’s song choice also evoked a sports connection: Piaf wrote it about her lover, boxer Marcel Cerdan. Cerdan died soon after she wrote the song, in a plane crash.

    ___

    Associated Press reporters Sylvie Corbet, Jerome Pugmire and Samuel Petrequin contributed.

    ___

    For more coverage of the Paris Olympics, visit https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games.

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  • Jason Reitman and Hollywood’s most prominent directors buy beloved Village Theater in Los Angeles

    Jason Reitman and Hollywood’s most prominent directors buy beloved Village Theater in Los Angeles

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    LOS ANGELES — Some of Hollywood’s most prominent filmmakers have purchased a 93-year-old iconic theater known as a cultural landmark for moviegoers in Los Angeles.

    Jason Reitman along with more than 30 directors including Steven Spielberg, Christopher Nolan and Bradley Cooper acquired Westwood’s Village Theater, the group announced Wednesday. The coalition wants to preserve the theater, which has become a mainstay for movie premieres since the venue opened in 1931.

    The terms of the purchase were not disclosed.

    Reitman said he felt compelled to pull together other filmmakers after the theater went up for sale last year. As a Los Angeles native, he wants to extend the rich history of the Village Theater, which is known for its 170-foot (52-meter) white Spanish tower and a large auditorium that can seat 1,300. It’s also nearby the University of California, Los Angeles.

    “I immediately made an offer and hoped my fellow directors would join me on this adventure,” Reitman said in a statement. He noted that some of his films, including “Up in the Air,” “Ghostbusters: Afterlife” and “Juno” premiered at the theater.

    “We take this stewardship very seriously and hope to offer a true community for anyone who loves the movies,” he added.

    The directors will showcase artifacts from their personal collections at the theater, including props, wardrobe and film prints.

    Chris Columbus, who directed the “Home Alone” and “Harry Potter” films, expects to share his extensive collection of 16mm film prints. He called the theater a “cinematic miracle.”

    Spielberg said he wants to help restore the theater to its “glory years as a film-going cultural institution.”

    Nolan added: “Cinema has always been the place where filmmakers and movie goers meet, and I’m thrilled to be collaborating with so many of my favorite directors on a space that will show what the future of film exhibition can be.”

    The other new owners include: J.J. Abrams, Judd Apatow, Damien Chazelle, Ryan Coogler, Alfonso Cuarón, Jonathan Dayton, Guillermo del Toro, Valerie Faris, Hannah Fidell, Alejandro González Iñárritu, James Gunn, Sian Heder, Rian Johnson, Gil Kenan, Karyn Kusama, Justin Lin, Phil Lord, David Lowery, Christopher McQuarrie, Chris Miller, Alexander Payne, Todd Phillips, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Jay Roach, Seth Rogen, Emma Seligman, Brad Silberling, Emma Thomas, Denis Villeneuve, Lulu Wang and Chloé Zhao.

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  • Los Angeles Opera to present Puccini’s ‘Madama Butterfly’ reimagined on film soundstage

    Los Angeles Opera to present Puccini’s ‘Madama Butterfly’ reimagined on film soundstage

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    LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Opera opens its 2024-25 season Sept. 21 with Puccini’s “Madama Butterfly” reimagined in a film studio and said Saturday it will present the company premiere of Osvaldo Golijov’s “Ainadamar” while reducing its offerings from six main-stage productions to five.

    Mario Gras’s “Butterfly” staging, first seen at Madrid’s Teatro Real in 2017, stars Karah Son as Cio-Cio-San and Jonathan Tetelma as Pinkerton in their company debuts. James Conlon conducts in the start of his 19th season as music director.

    “Because it’s set on this vintage Hollywood soundstage, the director, Martin Gas, he contextualizes the ersatz vision of Japan because he puts a frame around it,” LA Opera CEO Christopher Koelsch said. “Because of the Hollywood connection, even though it was not conceived for us, it feels particularly apt for this city.”

    Revenue has recovered from the coronavirus pandemic shutdown, with three main-stage productions thus far this season generating $5.2 million. The six main-stage productions in 2022-23 brought in $9.4 million; the COVID-shortened 2019-20 season resulted in just under $7 million from four stagings.

    “What I’m trying to do is build resiliency and strength for the organization in the long term,” Koelsch said.

    “Ainadamar (Fountain of Tears)” opens on April 26, 2025, starring Ana María Martínez and Daniela Mack in a Deborah Colker staging that first appeared at the Scottish Opera in 2022, was at the Detroit Opera and Welsh National Opera last year and is scheduled for the Metropolitan Opera this fall.

    “That’ll be our ninth main-stage opera in Spanish in the company’s 38-year history,” Koelsch said.

    Ian Judge’s 2005 staging of Gounod’s “Roméo et Juliette” will be revived starting Nov. 2 with Duke Kim and Amina Edris in their debuts.

    Michael Cavanagh’s production of Mozart’s “Così fan tutte,” first seen at the San Francisco Opera in 2021, opens March 8, 2025, with Conlon leading a cast that includes Erica Petrocelli and Rihab Chaieb.

    Tomer Zvulun’s staging of Verdi’s “Rigoletto,” which premiered at the 2019 Houston Grand Opera, opens May 31, 2025, with Quinn Kelsey, Rosa Feola in her company debut and René Barbera.

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  • In the biographical drama ‘Rob Peace,’ Chiwetel Ejiofor reframes a life

    In the biographical drama ‘Rob Peace,’ Chiwetel Ejiofor reframes a life

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    PARK CITY, Utah — PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Chiwetel Ejiofor had read Jeff Hobbs’ “The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace” years before Antoine Fuqua asked if he might consider writing and directing an adaptation.

    The book, which explores the complex life of a brilliant boy who grew up in the crime ridden and blighted East Orange, New Jersey, was written by Peace’s old Yale roommate. His story did not fit neatly into familiar tropes about rough beginnings, incarcerated fathers or overly simplistic ideas about success and “getting out.” This was a person who wanted to remain tied to his community, to his father, and also to succeed in his schooling and athletics (water polo) first at St. Benedict’s Preparatory School in Newark and then at Yale where he studied molecular biochemistry and biophysics.

    Nine years after he graduated from university, in which he spent time teaching at his old prep school, traveled extensively, considered grad school and made money selling marijuana, Peace was killed. Some of the narratives chalked it up to the fact that he went back to where he came from. Ejiofor said Peace’s mother told them that in the aftermath of his death, television crews came and filmed the garbage on the streets instead of the community.

    But Hobbs and, subsequently, Ejiofor saw something more complicated and nuanced about the flawed idea of “social mobility” and about the “confluence of race, housing, education and the criminal justice system.” And, most importantly, he felt like he hadn’t seen these ideas engaged with in film.

    “I thought it was very special and very powerful,” Ejiofor told The Associated Press in a recent interview. “It was sort of coincidental that I had had this big response to the book, but I hadn’t pursued it in any way. I jumped at the opportunity.”

    Fuqua, who had teamed up with Hobbs’ wife, Rebecca, to adapt the film, thought Ejiofor would be the right person after seeing his feature debut, “The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind,” about a 13-year-old boy in Malawi who gets inventive after his family can no longer afford school.

    “I knew it was meant to be a film,” Antoine Fuqua wrote in an email. “It was clear that (Chiwetel’s) humanistic approach to storytelling was a perfect fit to bring Rob’s life to screen.”

    “Rob Peace” is having its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on Monday, where it hopes to find a distributor to get it out to the world.

    “Movies like this need to be loved into existence, and that takes a village,” said producer Alex Kurtzman, who got close to Ejiofor while directing him in “The Man Who Fell to Earth” series. “You don’t make movies like this for money. You don’t make movies like this for any reason other than this is an important story to tell. And some reason, we are lucky enough to be able to tell it.”

    To play Rob, who would have to carry the film and live in the very different worlds he traversed in his life, Ejiofor and his casting director found Jay Will, a recent Juilliard graduate.

    “I never felt that it was a story about somebody who was able to play a role in different places,” Ejiofor said. “It was a story about somebody who very naturally and consistently was all of these things at once. You really had to invest and believe that about him. Jay very naturally did that because that’s part of his experience as well. He’s also just a fabulous actor and has this great charisma and real charm.”

    The performance is a meaty showcase for a fresh face who had done some television, including “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and Taylor Sheridan’s “Tulsa King,” which had not yet come out.

    Mary J. Blige was already on board to play his mother, Jackie, and Camila Cabello plays an on and off girlfriend Naya. Ejiofor cast himself in the role of the father, Skeet, self-aware enough to know that because it was in his wheelhouse, he’d just be directing another actor to play him as he would.

    “He’s kind of a of mercurial character in a way,” Ejiofor said. “There has to be a sequence of question marks about him, but you also have to be very compelled by him. And Rob’s journey is pulled by that sort of magnetic link he has to this to his father.”

    As with “The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind,” the director-actor, father-son dynamic actually ended up helping the film, too.

    Kurtzman marveled at Ejiofor’s ability to elegantly and calmly navigate three very different roles — writer, director and actor — under the high pressure environment of making a low-budget indie in just 28 days with no money for overtime.

    “I never saw him crack, break, get stressed ever,” Kurtzman said. “That he was able to hold space for all of those three things at the same time and know how to put them in a box while the clock was ticking, that’s a true artist.”

    Equally important to Ejiofor was to make the film look beautiful. He’d been appalled by the story of the TV crews and the garbage and sought out “Beanpole” and “The Last of Us” cinematographer Ksenia Sereda to realize this vision.

    “What she’s done here is elevated this with a real elegance and beauty and a style of telling the story, which doesn’t necessarily feel like we’ve seen before within this kind of cinematic experience,” he said.

    All of these facets work together to upend stereotypes and expectations. Ejiofor wants audiences to have a sense of hope in Rob’s story as well as to feel enriched by knowing him.

    “By the end of the film, you’re not just left with this bleakness. It’s obviously a tragic story, but it’s much, much richer than that,” he said. “Understanding his journey, I think, is profoundly important and enriching and enlightening. It has been for me.”

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  • Strike a pose — see AP's top entertainment photos of 2023

    Strike a pose — see AP's top entertainment photos of 2023

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    NEW YORK — 2023 was the year Barbie busted out of her box and Taylor triumphed again (and again). Actors abandoned red carpets and grabbed picket signs even as, around the world, the entertainment industry shook off the last remnants of the pandemic.

    Fashion houses resumed large-scale, eye-popping shows. The Oscars returned to full capacity and moved past The Slap. “Everything Everywhere All At Once” took the top prize, bringing Oscar glory to Michelle Yeoh and reviving the once-dormant career of the infectiously optimistic Ke Huy Quan.

    Fun was back.

    Phoebe Waller-Bridge and newcomer Ethann Isidore playfully posed in Cannes at the premiere of “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny.” Bryan Cranston, Tom Hanks and other “Asteroid City” stars looked overjoyed to be together at the glitzy French Riviera festival, which feted Michael Douglas and gave Johnny Depp his biggest comeback platform yet.

    Jared Leto left Met Gala guests puzzled with a realistic full cat costume based on late designer Karl Lagerfeld’s cat, Choupette. Doja Cat also donned a feline look for the gala.

    Days later, some real animals got in on the act, wearing looks inspired by outfits worn by Cardi B, Salma Hayek and other stars for the Pet Gala.

    By then, it was clear that Hollywood was headed for rough times. Screenwriters went on strike in early May and actors joined them two months later, grinding all film and television production to a halt. Leading the actors’ charge was “The Nanny” star Fran Drescher, whose fiery speech announcing the strike galvanized the union.

    There was still fun to be had. The Barbenheimer matchup between “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” produced box-office gold — two bona fide blockbusters.

    Live music — once silenced by the pandemic — roared on. Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Coldplay and others led to a blockbuster year for concerts.

    There were stories of loss and heartbreak. Striking actors and writers spoke about the pain they were experiencing, and why their struggle to win protections from artificial intelligence and a share of streaming profits was so important. Stars lost their moments while filmmakers tried to give them their due, as “Blue Beetle” director Angel Manuel Soto did when he attended the film’s premiere holding a photo of absent star Xolo Maridueña over his face.

    The deaths of stars like Paul Reubens, who as Pee-wee Herman delighted a generation, and Matthew Perry, whose role as Chandler Bing on “Friends” has delighted audiences around the globe across three decades, stunned fans.

    Other stories dominated headlines. Gwyneth Paltrow spent two weeks in a Utah courtroom in a trial over a ski slope collision that ended with a jury siding with her, awarding her a symbolic $1 verdict.

    Jonathan Majors, whose year started on a high note of praise for his film “Magazine Dreams” at Sundance, was accused of his assaulting his ex-girlfriend and went on a trial.

    The year will perhaps be best remembered for the everlasting dominance of Swift, who delighted fans with her record-breaking Eras tour.

    But her superstardom reached new heights through her relationship with NFL player Travis Kelce and the blockbuster release of a film version of her Eras show — a pair of unpredictable events in a year that went off script in more ways than one.

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  • Destiny’s Child Reunites & Celebs ‘Alien Superstar’ Slay At Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Film World Premiere

    Destiny’s Child Reunites & Celebs ‘Alien Superstar’ Slay At Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance’ Film World Premiere

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    All the stars shined and showed out on the chrome carpet for Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé, including a Destiny’s Child reunion.

    Source: Kevin Mazur / Getty

    The wait is finally over for the world premiere of the Renaissance film. The biggest names in Hollywood converged at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the headquarters of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. New York Times reports celebrities like Janelle Monáe, Victoria Monét, Chloe and Halle Bailey, Law Roach, Lori Harvey, and more dazzled at the film’s debut on Saturday.

    The almost 3-hour long movie captures the magic of the tour, but it’s more than a concert film. It offers a behind-the-scenes look at Beyoncé putting the tour together. The cameras quickly captured the Destiny’s Child reunion at the Renaissance World Tour Houston Homecoming.

    “It was like a new birth for us, and a lot of healing,” Beyoncé narrated. Hopefully, that was a taste of more to come from the beloved girl group.

    Destiny’s Child Reunites At The Renaissance Film Premiere

    The “Say My Name” singers clearly understood the “Alien Superstar” assignment. Seeing them together again sparked fans’ hopes for a true reunion, especially with this year marking the group’s 25th anniversary.

    LaTavia Roberson

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    LeToya Luckett

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Michelle Williams

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Kelly Rowland

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Beyoncé didn’t walk the chrome carpet, but Donatella Versace posted a flawless photo of the queen in a custom gown with matching gloves and platinum hair.

    Chloe x Halle also shared some cute moments of sisterly love.

    Chloe Bailey

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Halle Bailey and DDG

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Jay-Z, Blue Ivy, Sir, and Rumi didn’t walk the chrome carpet either, but it was still a Knowles-Carter family affair.

    Julez Smith and Ms. Tina Knowles

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Bianca Lawson

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Gena Avery Knowles and Matthew Knowles

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Check out more of the star-studed chrome carpet from the Renaissance film premiere after the flip.

    Janelle Monáe, Victoria Monét, Coco Jones, Lori Harvey, Kris Jenner & More Take The Renaissance Film Chrome Carpet

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    No matter where you looked, the Renaissance film premiere arrivals had “bad b***hes to the left” and “money b***hes to the right.” Of course, Beyoncé’s sparkling steed Reneigh had to pull up for the occasion. Check out more of the chrome carpet looks below.

    Reneigh

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Janelle Monáe

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Victoria Monét

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Coco Jones

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Normani

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    TS Madison

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Lori Harvey

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Marsai Martin

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Issa Rae

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Gabrielle Union-Wade

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Ava DuVernay

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Kris Jenner and Corey Gamble

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Law Roach

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Lupita Nyong’o

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Tia Mowry

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Tyler Perry

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Andra Day

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Laverne Cox

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Kevin Winter / Getty

    Jessica Betts and Niecy Nash-Betts

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty

    Lizzo

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    MJ Rodriguez

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Vanessa and Natalia Bryant

    World Premiere Of "Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé"

    Source: Amy Sussman / Getty

    Congratulations to Beyoncé on the premiere of her new film!

    Who wore your favorite looks for the world premiere of Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé?

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